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WiMAX in the Classroom: Teaching Cellular Networking with Hands-on Labs

WiMAX in the Classroom: Teaching Cellular Networking with Hands-on Labs. Jelena Mara šević 1 , Jan Janak 2 , Henning Schulzrinne 2 , Gil Zussman 1 1 Department of Electrical Engineering, 2 Department of Computer Science Columbia University, New York, NY. About the WiMAX Lab.

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WiMAX in the Classroom: Teaching Cellular Networking with Hands-on Labs

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  1. WiMAX in the Classroom:Teaching Cellular Networking with Hands-on Labs Jelena Marašević1, Jan Janak2, Henning Schulzrinne2, Gil Zussman1 1Department of Electrical Engineering, 2Department of Computer Science Columbia University, New York, NY

  2. About the WiMAX Lab • The goal: teach main cellular networking concepts • Compare cellular (WiMAX) to WLAN (Wi-Fi) • Understand the effect of the channel state on performance (throughput) • Understand the QoS mechanisms Allocated by BS Random Access

  3. In the past… • Setup: WiMAX BS and two laptops as mobile stations • Two locations with different channel quality • Graduate-level wireless & mobile networking class • Had both on-campus and remote students J. Marašević, J. Janak, H. Schulzrinne, and G. Zussman, "WiMAX in the Classroom: Designing a Cellular Networking Hands-on Lab", GREE2013, best educational paper award

  4. In Fall 2013 • Wanted to address issues from previous labs: • Unstable Wi-Fi connection • Unstable modulation • Changing locations • Remote students couldn’t conduct the entire lab • Forgotten Wi-Fi round trip times • Decided to build a more reliable setup • Decided to make the lab completely remote

  5. Class Overview • This time, a different class—Networking Lab, taught by Prof. Gil Zussman • Upper undergraduate/lower graduate • The class does not cover wireless networking; mostly hands-on labs on Internet protocols • 21 students in class EE B.S. M.S. CS CE

  6. WiMAX Setup • 4 ORBIT nodes, having LoS to the base station • 2 nodes have attenuators to emulate “bad” channel Base Station ORBIT nodes

  7. Hands-on Lab Network Configuration Access Service Network Linux Computer Experimentdata WWW ASN GW Indoor Unit Outdoor Unit WiMAX Wi-Fi Campus Network MS MS Control data MS MS

  8. The Hands-on Lab • Preparing for the lab: • Lecture & readings • Pre-lab • Lab instructions • Experiments (3h): • System setup & ping tests • Maximum throughput measurements • QoS measurements • Lab Report • Survey

  9. System Setup & Ping Tests • Objective: configure & compare the round trip time (RTT) between WiMAX and Wi-Fi • Steps: • Bring WiMAX interfaces up • Setup IP addresses • Ping the Linux computer over WiMAX and Wi-Fi • Questions for the lab report: • Which technology has shorter RTT and why?

  10. Maximum Throughput Measurements • Objective: understand channel state impact on throughput • Steps: • Observe modulation and link status • Send data: Linux computer → MS • Increase data rate until packet loss reaches 2% • Questions: • Relate the channel state to the throughput ---------------------------------------------- 2 MS [0x001DE136FF28] monitor info ---------------------------------------------- UL modulation 16-QAM (CTC) 3/4 UL RSSI -74.75 dBm UL Physical CINR 18.75 dB DL modulation 64-QAM (CTC) 5/6 DL Zone Specific Physical CINR 28 dB $ sudowimaxcu status link Link Status: Frequency : 2590000 KHz Signal : Excellent RSSI : -61 dBm CINR : 29 dB Avg TX PWR: -50 dBm BS ID : 44:51:DB:00:06:01 2% Packet loss 4 5 Data rate [Mbps]

  11. WiMAX QoS Measurements • Objective: understand QoS mechanisms • Setup: each pair of stations has one real-time (UGS) and one best effort (BE) MS • Steps: • Ping flood the Linux computer from one MS at a time • (UGS gets lower average RTT) • Ping flood the Linux comp. from both MSs with the same channel quality simultaneously • Ping flood from all 4 stations simultaneously • (UGS gets lower deviance from average RTT) • Questions: • Determine the MS-QoS class assignment

  12. Lab Assessment • Technical part: • The setup was more reliable than before—no interventions • Phantom MSs connecting to the BSs • Strange behavior at high modulation and coding scheme—very high packet loss (~70%) • Student ratings of the lab (1-poor, 5-excellent):

  13. Students’ Impressions • What did you like most about the lab? • “I could see UGS vs Best Effort in action” • “Connecting remotely, and the pre-lab reading preparation.” • “We were exposed to one of the latest technologies in the field of communication.” • “Have access to the real base stations” • What was your least favorite thing about the lab? • “Results were very inconsistent with what was supposed to happen, i.e., we saw no benefit of link adaptation for higher CINR. Also, we did not see the effect of simultaneous pings.” • “Maybe the equipment was not well configured. The lab result was somehow different from what we expected”

  14. Summary • Overall, students liked the lab, apart from the technical difficulties • Students find it interesting and important to learn about cellular networking • Pre-lab and instructions were clear and helpful • There are still issues that need to be resolved • We are interested in running the lab again this Spring • We could also implement similar LTE lab, if an LTE BS is obtained (Thanks) Questions? Email: jelena@ee.columbia.edu Paper: www.ee.columbia.edu/~jelena/wmx.pdf

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